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WO1990006615A1 - System and method for rapid charging of a battery - Google Patents

System and method for rapid charging of a battery
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Publication number
WO1990006615A1
WO1990006615A1PCT/SE1989/000682SE8900682WWO9006615A1WO 1990006615 A1WO1990006615 A1WO 1990006615A1SE 8900682 WSE8900682 WSE 8900682WWO 9006615 A1WO9006615 A1WO 9006615A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
charging
voltage
battery
charging current
current
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/SE1989/000682
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Bertil Mattsson
Original Assignee
Bertil Mattsson
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bertil MattssonfiledCriticalBertil Mattsson
Priority to DE68926623TpriorityCriticalpatent/DE68926623D1/en
Priority to EP89913110Aprioritypatent/EP0445180B1/en
Publication of WO1990006615A1publicationCriticalpatent/WO1990006615A1/en

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Abstract

Method for high-rate charging of batteries with sealed cells, whereby through supplied charging current the efficiency the single battery cell is actively influenced such that the charging time and temperature rise of the cell is minimized such that in a first step the battery is discharged to a voltage UB slightly higher than a first reference voltage (UO) whereafter in a first recharging step the supplied charging current IB is controlled progressively increasing according to the function IB = k (UB - UO) where k is an adjusted constant, until the pole voltage has reached a second reference voltage UB = û where û is maximum battery voltage and in a second charging step the charging current IB is controlled through voltage feedback such that UB ³ û whereby the amount of the supplied charging current is determined by the charging state of the battery cells. The first and second charging step can also be repeated with a fixed time interval with a free running time interval without charging current a number of cycles until a state of full charge is reached.

Description

SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR RAPID CHARGING OF A BATTERY.
The present invention refers to a method and a device to supply electric energy to a rechargeable battery in such a way that a substantial reduction of the charging time is obtained compared to previously known methods and devices.
The method according to the invention is mainly intended for
Ni-Cd batteries.
Technical problem
A conventional method of charging especially sealed Ni-Cd batteries is supplying a constant current during a certain time which in itself is a simple and reliable method. The manufacturers of this type of batteries recommend a charging current of 0.1 times the capacity of the cell (0.1 C Amperes)*, which gives more than 10 hours of charging.
Moreover in order to obtain a fully charged battery at this low charging current an extra time of 4 hours is required for full charge. Thus the total charging time with conventional methods is about 14 hours. The value of the charging current is defined by the quantity of oxygen that can be burned at the Cd-electrode in a fully charged state of the cell. In order to explain the function of a Ni-Cd - cell, accompanying Fig 1 shows different measured charging characteristics at constant charging current in which particularly
Fig. 1A shows cell voltage as a function of input charge at a certain charging current (0.2 C) at
different temperatures.
Fig. 1B shows charging acceptance or charging efficiency for different constant charging currents at room temperature
Fig. 1C shows charging acceptance or charging efficiency at room temperature being the ambient temperature at different cell temperatures with a normal charging rate of 0.1 C.
* C refers to the numerical value of the battery capacity in Ampere hours (Ah) The problem being the fundamental to the invention is that a user must have access to spare batteries for continous operation of a battery operated system if the decharging time is shorter than charging time. A charging time of 14 hours and a decharging of 1h demands 14 batteries for continous operation of the system.
State of the art
Through the US patent specification 4 246 529 a battery charger is known in which is used integrator means (4) an current switching means (8) in combination with a control circuit (7) whereby the control circuit receives a synchronizing signal at the start of each cycle as determined by a cyclical supply or pulse generator as well as information about the state of the integrator means which is compared with the predetermined average current. This information determines the required control signals for the integrator means and current switch means so as to maintain the value of average charging current substantially constant throughout the charging time.
Current sense means (5) are provided to sense the current flow through the battery and supply the integrator (4) with said current. In the above u-processor controlled battery charger for lead acid batteries the energy is pulsed with relatively short pulses into the battery and the average current is measured which can be expressed as
Figure imgf000004_0001
where Vc = charging voltage, Vb = battery pole voltage R3 = current sense resistance and θ = current angle
In this system the charging efficiency of the battery is not considered for different charging currents. The equation above does not show the progressively increasing initial course of charging current which is produced by the system according to the present invention.
Through US - patent specification 3 987 353 is known a battery charging control system in which the charging current is switched on and off at repeated intervals, whereby the open battery voltage during the "off" periods is used to generate a control signal to vary the magnitude of the charging current during "on" periods. The control signal is derived through extracting the resultant internal voltage drop (I.R Drop) at the battery connections when the charging current is switched off and thereafter differentiate the rate of decay of the battery voltage by means of the differentiator (30). A voltage is then derived from the differential signal and is used in one of three ways to control the magnitude of the charging current in order to progressively reduce its magnitude once gas generation has been detected as a result of a significant differential occuring.
In the above related control system for battery chargers which operates with pulses divided from the line frequency and evidently intended for lead acid batteries, the magnitude of charging current is modified as a function of the charging state of the battery which has been derived from the "gas drop". The charging characteristics is related to the efficiency but is not directed to high-rate charging.
Objects of the invention
A first object of the invention is to minimize the charging time as far as possible by making use of the intrinsic properties of the Ni-Cd cell.
A second object of the invention is to accomplish as high efficiency as possible at indicated charging conditions.
Technical solution
The problem is solved according to the present invention by using a specific property of the battery cell in such a way that, the larger charging current input in the cell, the greater charging acceptance or charging efficiency is obtained, see diagram A in Fig 1. The charging time is shortened, partly because of the higher charging current and partly because of the higher acceptance or efficiency. This charging method according to the invention moreover has the favourable effect that, when the acceptance is enhanced, less of the input energy is transformed into heat, which acts restricting to the temperature rise in the cells. As can be seen from diagram C in Fig 1 the temperature of the cell should be kept as low as possible for high acceptance or efficiency to be maintained.
The basic idea in the present invention is that the insintric properties are used actively in such a vay that highest possible acceptance for charging is obtained, which minimizes the charging time. The upper limit of the charging current depends on physical and chemical reasons such as the current density at the electrodes and the recombination of oxygen at the cadmium elektrode. When verifying the method according to the invention a maximum current of about 2.5* C Amperes have been used.
The charging method according to the present invention gives rise to a progressive process, since the charging current increases as the input electrochemical charge increases. the increase in current is controlled by the voltage of the battery, which according to diagram A Fig 1 increases with input charge. According to the invention the voltage level of the battery is used a coarse indication of full charge and transformed to a signal which is used for switching to charge with constant voltage. Since the acceptance is not complete or efficiency of 100% cannot be obtained, a certain heating of the cells happen during charging. As can be read from diagram A, Fig 1, the voltage hunch of the curve decreases with increasing cell temperature and with this the possibility to positively detect an appropriate switching level ( at constant charging current). A progressively increasing charging current enhances the voltage hunch which is thus favourable.
Before start of charging the battery is discharged and relatively low initial current is chosen (about 0.5 C Amps) in oirder to avoid stress on the cells.
With reference to accompanying drawing a first and a second embodiment of a battery charging circuit which perform the method of charging according to the present invention will be described.
In the drawing
Fig. 2 is a block diagram over a charging circuit
according to a first embodiment of the invention; Fig. 3 is a time diagram over different charging
processes of which Fig 3A shows charging at room temperature and Fig 3B shows charging at - 20° C; Fig. 4 is block diagram over a microprocessor based
system according to a second embodiment of the invention for rapid charging of battery cassettes in which is used the charging method according to the invention.
With reference to Fig. 2 a Ni-Cd battery with the pole voltage UB via a control transistor 20 and current limiting resistor 41, which is also used as an integration resistor, connected to a DC voltage source 4.
A control circuit 2 is connected to the base of the control transistor 20 and on one hand contains an amplifier 200 and on the other voltage comparators 210 and 220. The comparator 210 has on one of the inputs maximum battery voltage û as a reference and on the other UB. The comparator 220 on one of the inputs has a start voltage UO as a reference and on the other input UB. The level shift signals from the comparators 210 and 220 are supplied to a control unit 3 which contains memory and timing circuits so that charging can be supplied to the battery during certain time intervals and absorbed energy measured during the whole charging process.
To form a control circuit to control the charging current the control cicuit 2 is by way of a switch connected to summing points 22 and 23, of which the summation point 22 forms UB - UO and 23 forms û - UB where û and UO are reference voltages as above. UB is supplied to the control circuit 2 and the summation points 22, 23 by way of the measure or sense line 112.
With reference to the diagram in Fig 3 charging processes are described, which are obtained with a device according to the above.
Before a charging process is started, the battery is discharged in order to obtain a correct reference level for charging (with reference level is referred to as = 0 available charge) and supplied charge to be measured during a charging process. The discharge occurs by the control circuit activating the switch 21. The discharge time is defined by comparing UB with UO.
After a time of reactivation of the battery cells a new comparation with UO is carried out in the comparator 220 to examine if the starting condition Ub > Uo is satisfied. When the starting condition is positive the switch 21 by way of the control circuit 3 is set in position B which gives a charging current of
IB = k (UB - UO) In the initial moment IB is small, since UB is low.
As the battery sucessively accumulates charge, the the pole voltage of the battery UB increases. This voltage controls the charging current following the linear function above, which gives an increasing voltage (positive feedback). The process continues until UB reaches the reference voltage û. The comparator 210 thereby gives a level shift signal to the control unit 3, which shifts the switch 21 to position B. This first accelerated charging phase takes the time T'.
With the switch in position B a charging current IB is obtained which gives the battery voltage
UB = û
The system is now in a negative mode feedback and the pole voltage kept konstant. As the charge of the battery increases, the charging current starts to decay. After a total charging time T' + T", which has been calculated such that a battery which was from the beginning discharged has become fully charged the charging current is switched off, alternatively connected to trickle charging by way of the input 203 on the control circuit 2. By measuring supplied charge Qtot by means of an integrator built into the monitoring circuit and interrupt the charging when the battery has absorbed a certain amount of charge Qmax corresponding to a fully charged battery, the precision in the time control is enhanced and the resk for evercharging is eliminated.
At low temperatures, eg. - 20° C the voltage û is rapidly reached in the first charging phase which extends the charging time. By cyclically repeating the processes with the switch 21 in position A during the time T'and in position B during the time T''with a pause TPause see Fig. 3B, an efficient charging is accomplished even at low temperatures. The charging current is integrated a number of cycles until a state of full charge has occurred.
In order to further enhance the efficiency and correspondingly shorten the charging time at rapid charging of a cold battery the following procedure is carried out:
A "cold" battery is cycled a number of periods where every period contains a limited charging - discharging.
By this the battery is prepared chemically for a rapid charging. By reading the current in the first charging process at the voltage û and compare this current with a minimum value of IB an indication of "cold" battery is obtained and the cycling mode of above is activated.
With reference to Fig. 4 in the following a rapid charging system for battery cassettes comprising the charging circuit according to Fig. 2. In the system below stated functional features are included:
* Automatic control of discharging - charging of several battery cassettes simultaneously by means of a mikroprocessor which replaces the control circuit 2 and the control unit 3 in Fig. 2;
* Automatic adjustment to correct battery type by every type of battery cassette having a unique jumper combination in the adapter;
* In the control of discharging - charging process functions are included such as control of charging current, measuring of battery voltage, measuring of supplied charge and measuring of total charging time;
Charging currents, charging times etc for different battery types are coded in the program memory of the processor (PROM);
* User interface which describes the charging process in the form of a light emitting diode display on which status is shown separately for all 4 batteries and a display which indicates if the A- and/or B- cassette is connected. With reference to Fig. 4 the electronics system comprises a line block AC/DC and a separate DC converter DC/DC to supply the electronic blocks. Incoming power 220 V AC or 24 V DC is switched on and off by way of the switch S1.
In the CPU- block CPU is included an 8 - bits microcontroller ( Intel 80C31) which is provided with a program memory 32k EPROM, a data memory 8k SRAM, watchdog - timer circuit and a 8-bits A/D - converter. The CPU- block controls and supervises the function of the battery charger and communicates via a bus line with the display block DI and the analog block AN.
The analog block contains 4 units of 4-1 channel analog multiplexers with address decoders for measuring channels and choice of charging mode and a double multiplying 8 bits D/A converter for control of on one hand charging current directly from the CPU block and on the other control of the amplification Gi in the current control loop. The analog block further communicates further with the current control/ measuring block CCO and battery cassettes A and B.
The analog block is interfaced towards the battery cassettes for control and measurement of charging current, recieving of temperature status TB, measuring of pole voltage UB, recieving of battery code CODE, generation of trickle charging and control of FET-switches SW1 and SW2 to connect charging current and a discharging load.
The charging is started and stopped by means of the nonlocking switch S2. The display block DI operates a number of light emitting diode indicators which for example through flashing indication show that work in the form of charging is carried out in a battery cassette A,B while a lighted indicator shows that a work is completed which means that the batteries in a cassette are fully charged.
In order to illustrate the function of the battery charging system according to Fig. 4 an activity diagram covering a charging process is given below.
Phase: Activity:
1. The indicator " CHARGING" is activated to mark that charging is going on;
2. The timer is set to zero to measure total changing time;
3. Accumulated charge, Qtot is set to zero
4. The gain in the current control loop is set by
means of the gain factor Gi ;
5. Current control is activated
6. Charge measuring is started;
7. A current generator is connected to the battery;
8. The timer is set to zero for measuring of time in current control mode
9. If UB < Umax after the time Ticp the charging current is switched off and the indicator "ERROR" is alighted;
10. Shift to voltage control when UB = Umax.
11. The timer is set to zero for measuring of time in voltage control mode;
12. After the time Tvcp the charging current IB is
measured;
If IB < Ilow the battery should be discharged Tdis or down to the voltage Udis. During discharge the removed charge is calculated which is subtracted from Qtot
13. If Qtot < Qmax the charging current is switched off during the idle period Tpause whereupon the charging current is switched on and the charging continues from phase 5.
14. If Qtot< Qmax after a total charging time > Tmax the charging is interrupted and the indicator "ERROR" is alighted to indicate that the battery does not take charge;
15. When Qtot >= Qmax the battery is fully charged and the the charging current is interrupted. The indicator "CHARGING" is alighted.
Abbreviations:
Gi = Amplification factor to DAC in the current control loop
Ticp = maximum time for current control phase
Tvcp = maximum time for voltage control phase
Tdis = maximum time for discharge in the charging cycle
Ilow = minimum current for discharge in the charging cycle
Udis = pole voltage level where discharge should be interrupted
Umax = û = pole voltage level for transition to voltage control
Qmax = Amount of charge which shall be supplied to the battery to obtain full charge

Claims

1. Method for high-rate charging of batteries with sealed cells, whereby through supplied charging current the efficiency the single battery cell is actively influenced such that the charging time and temperature rise of the cell is minimized
c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n
that in a first step the battery is discharged to a voltage
UB slightly higher than a first reference voltage (UO) whereafter in a first recharging step the supplied charging current IB is controlled progressively increasing according to the function
IB = k (UB - UO)
where k is an adjusted constant, until the pole voltage has reached a second reference voltage
UB = û
where û is maximum battery voltage.
2. Method according to claim 1
c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n
that in a second recharging step the charging current IB is controlled through voltage feedback such that
UB = û
whereby the amount of the supplied charging current is determined by the charging state of the battery cells.
3. Method according to claim 1 - 2
c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n
that supplied charge is measured and that the first and second recharging step is followed by a certain time interval disconnected without charging current (Tpause) contained in a charging cycle and carrying out a number of cycles until a state of full charge corresponding to a certain amount of charge (Qmax) is reached.
4. Device to carry out the method to high-rate charge a battery (1) according to claims 1-3 comprising a control means in series with a DC current source,
c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n
a control circuit (2) connected to the control electrode of the control means (20) whereby the control circuit comprises a control amplifier (200) and voltage comparators (210), (220) which control circuit controls the charging current in response to signals from summing circuits (22), (23) which form respectively first and second differential control voltages
(UB - UO), (û- UB) where UO and û are reference voltages corresponding to initial voltage and final voltage and UB the pole voltage of the battery supplied by way of a measuring line for pole voltage (112), said comparator (210) gives a level shift and the comparator (220) gives a level shift at the voltage û for the second recharging step.
5. Device according to claim 4
c h a r a c t e r i z e d i n
a control unit (3) containing memory and time generating means which in response to level shift of the comparators (22), (23) start charging and shifts between first and second recharging steps by activation of a switch (21) for the summing circuits (22), (23).
PCT/SE1989/0006821988-11-251989-11-24System and method for rapid charging of a batteryWO1990006615A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
DE68926623TDE68926623D1 (en)1988-11-251989-11-24 METHOD AND DEVICE FOR QUICK CHARGING A BATTERY
EP89913110AEP0445180B1 (en)1988-11-251989-11-24System and method for rapid charging of a battery

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
SE8804267ASE465053B (en)1988-11-251988-11-25 METHOD AND DEVICE FOR FAST CHARGING OF ACCUMULATOR BATTERIES
SE8804267-61988-11-25

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
WO1990006615A1true WO1990006615A1 (en)1990-06-14

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US (1)US5233284A (en)
EP (1)EP0445180B1 (en)
JP (1)JPH04502099A (en)
AT (1)ATE139067T1 (en)
DE (1)DE68926623D1 (en)
SE (1)SE465053B (en)
WO (1)WO1990006615A1 (en)

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EP0629032A1 (en)*1993-06-101994-12-14LARIMART S.p.A.Device for making the charge and revitalization treatment of batteries
FR2739724A1 (en)*1995-10-051997-04-11Accumulateurs Fixes METHOD FOR CHARGING NICKEL-CADMIUM BATTERIES
CN112349986A (en)*2020-11-062021-02-09宇能电气有限公司Self-adaptive charging method and system

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US5656920A (en)*1992-10-131997-08-12Gnb Battery Technologies, Inc.Method and apparatus for charging a lead-acid battery
US5633576A (en)*1993-01-191997-05-27Premier Engineered Products, Inc.Battery charging method with stepped current profile with operating parameter compensation and associated charger
US5583416A (en)*1994-01-261996-12-10Gnb Battery Technologies, Inc.Apparatus and method for step-charging batteries to optimize charge acceptance
JP2743155B2 (en)*1995-06-161998-04-22株式会社ジップチャージ Charger and charge processing system
US5774733A (en)*1995-10-031998-06-30Microchip Technology IncorporatedMicrocontroller with analog front-end for providing intelligent battery management
KR980006710A (en)*1996-06-291998-03-30김광호 Battery charger to prevent memory effect
US5804944A (en)*1997-04-071998-09-08Motorola, Inc.Battery protection system and process for charging a battery
US5969506A (en)*1997-08-111999-10-19C & K Systems, Inc.Apparatus and method for rapid bulk charging of a lead acid battery
US6094033A (en)*1998-10-022000-07-25Georgia Tech Research CorporationBattery state of charge detector with rapid charging capability and method
US6229285B1 (en)*1997-10-032001-05-08Georgia Tech Research CorporationDetector for rapid charging and method
JP3917099B2 (en)*2003-03-312007-05-23株式会社ユタカ電機製作所 AC adapter power supply
US7446506B2 (en)*2006-01-132008-11-04Leadtrend Technology Corp.Apparatus for preventing capacitor charger from overcharging and method thereof
CN104124741A (en)*2013-04-292014-10-29鸿富锦精密电子(天津)有限公司Timing charging circuit

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US3886428A (en)*1973-05-171975-05-27Macharg J AElectronic control system for battery chargers
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US4246529A (en)*1977-11-041981-01-20Minitronics Pty LimitedCurrent integrating battery charger

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US3886428A (en)*1973-05-171975-05-27Macharg J AElectronic control system for battery chargers
US3987353A (en)*1973-12-211976-10-19Macharg J AControl systems for battery chargers
US4246529A (en)*1977-11-041981-01-20Minitronics Pty LimitedCurrent integrating battery charger

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
EP0629032A1 (en)*1993-06-101994-12-14LARIMART S.p.A.Device for making the charge and revitalization treatment of batteries
FR2739724A1 (en)*1995-10-051997-04-11Accumulateurs Fixes METHOD FOR CHARGING NICKEL-CADMIUM BATTERIES
EP0768745A3 (en)*1995-10-051997-04-23SaftCharging method for sealed nickel-cadmium batteries
CN112349986A (en)*2020-11-062021-02-09宇能电气有限公司Self-adaptive charging method and system

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
EP0445180A1 (en)1991-09-11
SE8804267D0 (en)1988-11-25
DE68926623D1 (en)1996-07-11
SE465053B (en)1991-07-15
US5233284A (en)1993-08-03
JPH04502099A (en)1992-04-09
EP0445180B1 (en)1996-06-05
ATE139067T1 (en)1996-06-15

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